How Often is OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Training Required?
OSHA bloodborne pathogens training is required prior to an employee being assigned a task in which there may be occupational exposure to blood or another potentially infectious material. Thereafter, training is required at least annually and whenever there is a material change that affects the employee’s potential exposure. Like many standards in Subpart Z of the OSHA standards (Toxic and Hazardous Substances), the OSHA bloodborne pathogens standard is extremely comprehensive. The standard (§1910.1030) covers every type of engineering control to mitigate the threat of an employee acquiring an infection from contact with blood, other bodily fluids (including saliva), human tissues, or medical equipment. How to Comply with the Bloodborne Pathogens Standard To comply with the bloodborne pathogens standard, employers must compile a list of all job classifications in which some or all employees potentially have occupational exposure to bloodborne pathogens. They must also list all tasks and procedures in those job classifications, and develop engineering controls and work practices to...
Is Google Analytics HIPAA Compliant?
Google Analytics is not HIPAA compliant and cannot be used by HIPAA covered entities or business associates to track the activity of website visitors if any metrics collected by the analytics service include individually identifiable health information. However, if data is anonymized before being sent to Google Analytics, HIPAA compliance is not an issue. In December 2022, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a bulletin discussing the use of online tracking technologies by HIPAA covered entities and business associates. The bulletin explains what tracking technologies are and how the HIPAA compliance rules apply to covered entities and business associates that use tracking technologies. The key takeaway from the bulletin is that tracking technologies such as Google Analytics can be used by HIPAA covered entities and business associates on most “unauthenticated” web pages (i.e., a general information web page) but not on “user-authenticated” web pages that require a user to login or create a user profile (i.e., a patient portal or telehealth portal)....
Is Google Calendar HIPAA Compliant?
Google Calendar is HIPAA compliant and can be used to enter, receive, store, or share Protected Health Information (PHI) when the time management and calendar scheduling service is used as part of a business Workspace account that is configured to comply with HIPAA and covered by the HIPAA Business Associate Addendum to Google’s Service Agreement. Google Calendar was launched in 2006 and is now part of Google’s Workspace suite of products and services. Google Calendar could potentially be used for scheduling appointments, which may require protected health information to be added. Uploading any protected health information to the cloud is not permitted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule unless certain HIPAA requirements have first been satisfied. A risk analysis must be conducted to assess potential risks to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI. Risks must be subjected to a HIPAA-compliant risk management process and reduced to an acceptable level. Access controls must be implemented to ensure that ePHI can only be viewed by authorized individuals, appropriate security...
What is FINRA Compliance?
FINRA compliance means complying with all applicable standards developed by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority for brokers and brokerage firms conducting financial transactions that relate to securities and the New York Stock Exchange. The failure to comply with FINRA regulations can result in fines, suspensions, and loss of license. What is FINRA? FINRA, an acronym of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, is a non-profit self-regulatory organization or SRO which is overseen by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). An SRO is a non-government agency that has a degree of regulatory authority over an industry, which in the case of FINRA is the securities industry and the New York Stock Exchange. The SEC’s role is to ensure fairness for investors whereas FINRA is also concerned with monitoring and regulating stockbrokers and brokerage firms, deterring misconduct, and ensuring the financial markets are fair. FINRA ensures transparency in the industry transaction and develops and enforces rules for the securities industry. FINRA also helps enforce SEC rules and other...
HIPAA Rules on Contingency Planning
The HIPAA rules on contingency planning are that covered entities must prepare a contingency plan for each type of foreseeable disaster that includes data backup, emergency mode operations, and disaster recovery. The HIPAA rules on contingency planning also require plans to be tested and assessed for effectiveness – which, for healthcare organizations, is also a condition of participation in Medicare. Contingency plans should cover all types of emergencies, such as natural disasters, fires, vandalism, system failures, cyberattacks, and ransomware incidents. The steps that must be taken for each scenario could well be different, especially in the case of cyberattacks vs. natural disasters. The plan should incorporate procedures to follow for specific types of disasters. Contingency planning is not simply a best practice. It is a requirement of the HIPAA Security Rule. Contingency planning should not be considered a onetime checkbox item necessary for HIPAA compliance. It should be an ongoing process with plans regularly checked, updated, and tested to ensure any deficiencies...



